Wonderful days followed for Kazan.
He missed the forests and deep snows. He missed
the daily strife of keeping his team-mates in trace,
the yapping at his heels, the straight long pull over
the open spaces and the barrens. He missed the
“Koosh koosh Hoo-yah!”
of the driver, the spiteful snap of his twenty-foot
caribou-gut whip, and that yelping and straining behind
him that told him he had his followers in line.
But something had come to take the place of that which
he missed. It was in the room, in the air all
about him, even when the girl or his master was not
near. Wherever she had been, he found the presence
of that strange thing that took away his loneliness.
It was the woman scent, and sometimes it made him
whine softly when the girl herself was actually with
him. He was not lonely, nights, when he should
have been out howling at the stars. He was not
lonely, because one night he prowled about until he
found a certain door, and when the girl opened that
door in the morning she found him curled up tight
against it. She had reached down and hugged him,
the thick smother of her long hair falling all over
him in a delightful perfume; thereafter she placed
a rug before the door for him to sleep on. All
through the long nights he knew that she was just
beyond the door, and he was content. Each day
he thought less and less of the wild places, and more
of her.
Then there came the beginning of the
change. There was a strange hurry and excitement
around him, and the girl paid less attention to him.
He grew uneasy. He sniffed the change in the
air, and he began to study his master’s face.
Then there came the morning, very early, when the babiche
collar and the iron chain were fastened to him again.
Not until he had followed his master out through the
door and into the street did he begin to understand.
They were sending him away! He sat suddenly back
on his haunches and refused to budge.
“Come, Kazan,” coaxed the man. “Come
on, boy.”
He hung back and showed his white
fangs. He expected the lash of a whip or the
blow of a club, but neither came. His master laughed
and took him back to the house. When they left
it again, the girl was with them and walked with her
hand touching his head. It was she who persuaded
him to leap up through a big dark hole into the still
darker interior of a car, and it was she who lured
him to the darkest corner of all, where his master
fastened his chain. Then they went out, laughing
like two children. For hours after that, Kazan
lay still and tense, listening to the queer rumble
of wheels under him. Several times those wheels
stopped, and he heard voices outside. At last
he was sure that he heard a familiar voice, and he
strained at his chain and whined. The closed
door slid back. A man with a lantern climbed in,
followed by his master. He paid no attention
to them, but glared out through the opening into the
gloom of night. He almost broke loose when he
leaped down upon the white snow, but when he saw no
one there, he stood rigid, sniffing the air.
Over him were the stars he had howled at all his life,
and about him were the forests, black and silent,
shutting them in like a wall. Vainly he sought
for that one scent that was missing, and Thorpe heard
the low note of grief in his shaggy throat. He
took the lantern and held it above his head, at the
same time loosening his hold on the leash. At
that signal there came a voice from out of the night.
It came from behind them, and Kazan whirled so suddenly
that the loosely held chain slipped from the man’s
hand. He saw the glow of other lanterns.
And then, once more, the voice
“Kaa-aa-zan!”
He was off like a bolt. Thorpe laughed to himself
as he followed.
“The old pirate!” he chuckled.
When he came to the lantern-lighted
space back of the caboose, Thorpe found Kazan crouching
down at a woman’s feet. It was Thorpe’s
wife. She smiled triumphantly at him as he came
up out of the gloom.
“You’ve won!” he
laughed, not unhappily. “I’d have
wagered my last dollar he wouldn’t do that for
any voice on earth. You’ve won! Kazan,
you brute, I’ve lost you!”
His face suddenly sobered as Isobel
stooped to pick up the end of the chain.
“He’s yours, Issy,”
he added quickly, “but you must let me care for
him until we know. Give me
the chain. I won’t trust him even now.
He’s a wolf. I’ve seen him take an
Indian’s hand off at a single snap. I’ve
seen him tear out another dog’s jugular in one
leap. He’s an outlaw a bad dog in
spite of the fact that he hung to me like a hero and
brought me out alive. I can’t trust him.
Give me the chain ”
He did not finish. With the snarl
of a wild beast Kazan had leaped to his feet.
His lips drew up and bared his long fangs. His
spine stiffened, and with a sudden cry of warning,
Thorpe dropped a hand to the revolver at his belt.
Kazan paid no attention to him.
Another form had approached out of the night, and
stood now in the circle of illumination made by the
lanterns. It was McCready, who was to accompany
Thorpe and his young wife back to the Red River camp,
where Thorpe was in charge of the building of the
new Trans-continental. The man was straight,
powerfully built and clean shaven. His jaw was
so square that it was brutal, and there was a glow
in his eyes that was almost like the passion in Kazan’s
as he looked at Isobel.
Her red and white stocking-cap had
slipped free of her head and was hanging over her
shoulder. The dull blaze of the lanterns shone
in the warm glow of her hair. Her cheeks were
flushed, and her eyes, suddenly turned to him, were
as blue as the bluest bakneesh flower and glowed
like diamonds. McCready shifted his gaze, and
instantly her hand fell on Kazan’s head.
For the first time the dog did not seem to feel her
touch. He still snarled at McCready, the rumbling
menace in his throat growing deeper. Thorpe’s
wife tugged at the chain.
“Down, Kazan down!” she commanded.
At the sound of her voice he relaxed.
“Down!” she repeated,
and her free hand fell on his head again. He slunk
to her feet. But his lips were still drawn back.
Thorpe was watching him. He wondered at the deadly
venom that shot from the wolfish eyes, and looked
at McCready. The big guide had uncoiled his long
dog-whip. A strange look had come into his face.
He was staring hard at Kazan. Suddenly he leaned
forward, with both hands on his knees, and for a tense
moment or two he seemed to forget that Isobel Thorpe’s
wonderful blue eyes were looking at him.
“Hoo-koosh, Pedro charge!”
That one word charge was
taught only to the dogs in the service of the Northwest
Mounted Police. Kazan did not move. McCready
straightened, and quick as a shot sent the long lash
of his whip curling out into the night with a crack
like a pistol report.
“Charge, Pedro charge!”
The rumble in Kazan’s throat
deepened to a snarling growl, but not a muscle of
his body moved. McCready turned to Thorpe.
“I could have sworn that I knew
that dog,” he said. “If it’s
Pedro, he’s bad!”
Thorpe was taking the chain.
Only the girl saw the look that came for an instant
into McCready’s face. It made her shiver.
A few minutes before, when the train had first stopped
at Les Pas, she had offered her hand to this man and
she had seen the same thing then. But even as
she shuddered she recalled the many things her husband
had told her of the forest people. She had grown
to love them, to admire their big rough manhood and
loyal hearts, before he had brought her among them;
and suddenly she smiled at McCready, struggling to
overcome that thrill of fear and dislike.
“He doesn’t like you,”
she laughed at him softly. “Won’t
you make friends with him?”
She drew Kazan toward him, with Thorpe
holding the end of the chain. McCready came to
her side as she bent over the dog. His back was
to Thorpe as he hunched down. Isobel’s
bowed head was within a foot of his face. He
could see the glow in her cheek and the pouting curve
of her mouth as she quieted the low rumbling in Kazan’s
throat. Thorpe stood ready to pull back on the
chain, but for a moment McCready was between him and
his wife, and he could not see McCready’s face.
The man’s eyes were not on Kazan. He was
staring at the girl.
“You’re brave,”
he said. “I don’t dare do that.
He would take off my hand!”
He took the lantern from Thorpe and
led the way to a narrow snow-path branching off, from
the track. Hidden back in the thick spruce was
the camp that Thorpe had left a fortnight before.
There were two tents there now in place of the one
that he and his guide had used. A big fire was
burning in front of them. Close to the fire was
a long sledge, and fastened to trees just within the
outer circle of firelight Kazan saw the shadowy forms
and gleaming eyes of his team-mates. He stood
stiff and motionless while Thorpe fastened him to
a sledge. Once more he was back in his forests and
in command. His mistress was laughing and clapping
her hands delightedly in the excitement of the strange
and wonderful life of which she had now become a part.
Thorpe had thrown back the flap of their tent, and
she was entering ahead of him. She did not look
back. She spoke no word to him. He whined,
and turned his red eyes on McCready.
In the tent Thorpe was saying:
“I’m sorry old Jackpine
wouldn’t go back with us, Issy. He drove
me down, but for love or money I couldn’t get
him to return. He’s a Mission Indian, and
I’d give a month’s salary to have you see
him handle the dogs. I’m not sure about
this man McCready. He’s a queer chap, the
Company’s agent here tells me, and knows the
woods like a book. But dogs don’t like
a stranger. Kazan isn’t going to take to
him worth a cent!”
Kazan heard the girl’s voice,
and stood rigid and motionless listening to it.
He did not hear or see McCready when he came up stealthily
behind him. The man’s voice came as suddenly
as a shot at his heels.
“Pedro!”
In an instant Kazan cringed as if touched by a lash.
“Got you that time didn’t
I, you old devil!” whispered McCready, his face
strangely pale in the firelight. “Changed
your name, eh? But I got you didn’t
I?”